Into a half-pint glass bottle, put some zinc, granulated by being melted in a ladle, and then poured gradually into water. Add some sulphuric acid, diluted with eight parts by weight of water. Then pass a glass tube with a capillary bore, through a cork, which you have previously made to closely fit the bottle, and cork the bottle well. In a short time, the atmospheric air will be expelled, and hydrogen gas will rise through the tube; you then apply a light, and the gas will become ignited. If you now hold another glass tube, about eighteen or twenty inches long over the flame sufficiently wide to enclose the other tube very loosely (see engraving), the little speck of flame will sport along the larger tube, and musical sounds will be produced, which may be varied by using other tubes of different dimensions, and made of different materials; the wide tubes forming the lower, and the narrow tubes the upper notes.
MINIATURE WILL O’-THE-WISP.
Put a small piece or two of the phosphuret of lime into a saucer of water, when bubbles of phosphuretted hydrogen gas will rise to the surface, explode into flame, and cause a white smoke; representing, on a small scale, the ignis fatuus, or will o’-the-wisp, as seen over marshy ground, or stagnant pools of water.
PHOSPHORIC ILLUMINATION.
A light so brilliant that the eye can scarcely bear to contemplate it, is produced by the immersion of phosphorus in oxygen gas. To perform this experiment, you place a piece of phosphorus in a copper cup, of the circumference of a sixpence, which is fastened to a thick piece of iron wire, attached to a cork which fits a bottle (as in the foregoing experiment) filled with oxygen gas. Set fire to the phosphorous, and quickly plunge it into the bottle; when the splendour of the combustion will be surpassingly beautiful.
It is necessary to observe, that the heat is so excessive, that if the piece of phosphorous in this experiment be larger than a small pea, there will be great danger of breaking the bottle.
COMBUSTION OF IRON IN OXYGEN GAS.
Twist a piece of fine iron wire, such as is used by piano-forte makers, round a cylindrically-shaped piece of wood or metal, which will give it a spiral form; or a broken watch-spring, which may be bought for a trifle of the watch-makers, will answer the same purpose. Fasten round one end of it some waxed cotton thread or twine, and attach the other end to a cork, which fits a glass jar or bottle, that will hold a quart, filled with oxygen gas. Having made the wire red-hot by setting light to the thread, plunge it into the bottle. Do not cork the bottle, but let the cork merely lay on the mouth, and to prevent its being burned, a small a piece of lead should be fastened to the bottom of it. The iron will instantly begin to burn with great brilliancy, throwing out luminous scintillations.